The “Fearless Girl” statue may not stay on Wall Street forever — but it has found a permanent home on a middle-aged woman’s arm.

Software saleswoman Misty Allen, 47, was so inspired by the image of the defiant little girl that she got a massive tattoo of it as a message to the tech bros who have put her through years of “sexism and misogyny.”

“Tech is a male dominated culture — men have a lot of power, a lot of voices. I looked at it as me as the little girl continuing to stand up to that, to raise my voice and not allow myself to be pushed aside,” she told The Post.

Allen went under the needle for three hours to get a huge black and white depiction of the statue — alongside its iconic “Charging Bull” counterpart — inked onto her left bicep at a Portland, Oregon parlor three weeks ago.

She works from home and covers her tats when meeting clients, so the image is unlikely to come directly under the Google Glass-ed gaze of many bro-grammers, but she says the figure inspires her to stand her ground in the face of jerks.

Pics of the new addition to Allen’s body were a big hit on feminist Facebook page Pantsuit Nation — although some in the Hillary Clinton crowd couldn’t resist scolding her.

“There were a few lecturing, ‘Wait until you see your arm at 60’ — yeah, I’m pretty sure in know a tattoo is permanent,” said Allen, who has several other tattoos.

The actual statue — an International Women’s Day publicity stunt from State Street Global Advisors ostensibly pushing “greater gender diversity on corporate boards” — has inspired plenty of lecturing, too.

“Charging Bull” sculptor Arturo Di Modica wants it gone, dismissing it as an “advertising trick” that is insulting to his work of art, while other critics have pointed out that State Street’s own board only has three women out of 11 directors.

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Allen actually agrees that the company behind the image now permanently branded on her body is letting the sisterhood down — but she loved the “feminine yet tough” imagery of the gutsy little girl so much that she went ahead with the tat anyway.

“I’m not thrilled about that part — they aren’t really walking the talk,” she said.

Despite her membership to the Pantsuit Nation page, Allen is a Bernie Sanders supporter who only came around to the former secretary of state as an alternative to Donald Trump.

Her anger over Trump’s election helped cement her decision to get the feminist figure etched onto her flesh forever.

“He is every single man who has ever sexually harassed me, he is every single man who has ever treated me like my ass or boobs were more important than my brain and pushed me aside. He’s that guy,” said Allen.